WINNER
OF THE RUTH SCHWARTZ AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE, THE BELGIUM PRIZE FOR
EXCELLENCE, THE ONTARIO SCHOOL LIBRARIANS' AWARD
Alex
Jackson is thrilled when his newsman father asks him to go to
Beijing, China, where students and civilians are demonstrating for
democracy in Tian An Men Square. Alex's excitement turns to
horror and dismay when the movement is met with military violence
and he finds himself alone amid the turmoil, carrying illegal video
tapes, desperate to escape the forbidden city. Based on
painstaking research, Forbidden City is an accurate and moving
novel of the "Tian An Men Square Massacre." Browse and Search this
book
FAQ
WHERE
DID YOU GET THE IDEA FOR THIS STORY?
The idea for this novel came from the events that took place in
Beijing, China in June, 1989. I had been following the
student protests in the media since April of that year and when the
night of the massacre came I was horrified, angry and sad, but not
surprised.
About two weeks after the Beijing Massacre I decided to try to
write a novel which would tell the events as accurately as
possible. I didnât want the tragedy to be forgotten.
Why write a novel and not a history book? Well, most people
in the general public donât read history books; they prefer
stories. Besides, Iâm a story writer, not a historian!
DID ANY OF THE STORY HAPPEN TO YOU?
No. I lived in Beijing, teaching English to graduate students
at the Foreign Affairs College from August, 1988 until July,
1989. I had taught in Harbin for a year before that. I
was familiar with the culture and modern Chinese history; also, I
knew the city of Beijing very well, having explored it for a year
by bicycle. These things ãqualifiedä me to write the
story.
ARE ANY OF THE CHARACTERS BASED ON PEOPLE YOU KNOW OR OTHER REAL
PEOPLE?
No. There are real people mentioned in the book, of course,
like Deng Xiao-ping, the recently deceased leader of China, but the
actual characters--Alex, his dad and Eddie, Lao Xu and Xin-hua, are
invented. When I lived in Harbin an interpreter was assigned
to me and my family and part of his job was to report back to the
college authorities about us. But we understood that; he
became a good friend and still is.
WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST CHALLENGE IN WRITING THIS NOVEL?
Mixing real and fictional events was difficult because my main
purpose was to tell what happened as accurately as possible, and I
wanted to do that by putting fictional Canadian characters in the
centre of the action. So my characters were always
subservient to the real events. Also, research was hard since
I could only rely on newspapers, magazines, television and
radio--all information that was fresh at the time and sometimes had
to be studied and interpreted so that I could figure out the
significance of the events reported.
** For a more detailed report on the writing of this book, tell
your search engine to find Canadian Childrenâs Literature, then
look for the 1997 issue on History.
IS ANY OF THE STORY BASED ON REAL EVENTS?
Yes.